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7/29/2019 World History to 1500 A.D.-Ch12-Europe_Middle_Ages
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Chapter 12
The Making of Europe in the Middle Ages
W
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The New Kingdoms of the Old Western Empire
The New Kingdoms of the Old Western Empire
1. The Visigoths only weakly controlled Spain, having generated no loyalty to the crown. Consequently, when confronted by a Muslim invasion in711, the Visigoths were easily defeated. A request for aid from Muslims in North Africa by one of the disaffected groups in Spain resulted in aninvading force of only 12,000 men but once they came, the Muslims would not leave. By 718 the Muslim victory was complete.
2. Like the Visigoths in Spain, the OstrogothicKingdom of Italy was weak, lasting solely through the force of the personality of Theodoric (493-526). Although he ruled as a king, he was considered to be only a regent by the rulers of Constantinople. Byzantine armies of Justinian (527-565)
conquered Italy between 535 and 554, driving the Ostrogoths from the land. The Byzantine victory was short lived as German Lombards from thenorth invaded Italy in 568 and conquered the northern and central regions of the peninsula. The Byzantines, however, were able to retain control of
the area around Ravenna that served as the capital of the Italian lands still under Byzantine sovereignty.
3. The Visigoths and Ostrogoths had helped to destroy the Western Roman Empire but their ascendancy would not last long. On the other hand,the Frankish Kingdom would grow stronger over time. In part, this was accomplished due to the conversion of Clovis (481-511) around 500 toChristianity and the subsequent support of the bishops of Gaul and the pope. Clovis also extended his domain as far as the Pyrenees Mountainsand made Paris his headquarters. The sons of Clovis conquered both the Burgundians in eastern Gaul and the Ostrogoths north of the Alps.
4. Roman abandonment of Britain in the fifth century opened the opportunity for the Angles and Saxons, a Germanic people from Denmark and
northern Germany. They met resistance from the Celts who managed to retain control of the western Briton lands. The Germans eventually carvedout small kingdoms throughout the island. Christian missionaries ultimately would convert the German invaders.
5. In 533-34 the forces of the Byzantine emperor Justinian gained North Africa as the emperor pursued an eventually unsuccessful attempt to reunite
the Roman Empire.
Questions:
1. Why were the various barbarian powers unable to maintain control over their conquered territories?
2. How important was the relationship struck by Clovis with Christianity?
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Transformation of the Roman World
New Germanic Kingdom Kingdom of the Franks
Clovis (482-511)
Converted to Christianity
Frankish kingdom
Society of the Germanic Peoples
Family the crucial bond Law was personal
Wergeld(fine paid by the wrongdoer)
Role of the Christian Church
Organization of the Church
Archbishop and bishop Bishop of Rome
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Charlemagnes Empire
Charlemagnes Empire
1. Extending diagonally across northern Italy were the Papal States that were gained by the papacy when a Frankish army of King Pipin (751-768)defeated the Lombards. Significantly, the Franks would provide the Church with a dependable western ally to replace the Byzantines who had
previously protected Rome from the Lombards.
2. In 773 the Lombards in northern Italy were again defeated, this time by the forces ofCharlemagne (768-814). The victory establishedCharlemagne's control over the north of Italy.
3. Charlemagne invaded northern Spain in 778 to take advantage of feuds among the Muslims. Ultimately, the Franks drove the Muslims back tothe Ebro River. Between the Ebro and the Pyrenees, he established and fortified the Spanish March as a bulwark against Muslim Spain.
4. Charlemagne's army expanded Frankish control into Bavaria in 788 and in 804 into Saxony after stubborn resistance and several campaigns. Inboth instances Christianity was extended as the German tribal leaders and their followers were converted, at least nominally.
5. With the eastern frontier under continual threat by the Avars, Asiatic nomads related to the Huns, and the Slavs, Charlemagne mounted sixcampaigns that almost eliminated the Avars. A military province in the valley of the Danube was set up to guard against any future activity from the
eastern nomads. Called East Mark, it later was named Austrasia.
6. Aachen, centrally located in the north, was to be Charlemagne's new capital. The site was selected for its hot springs. The plan was to make thenew city as glorious as Constantinople and Ravenna. It never matched the dreams and was abandoned after Charlemagne's death (814).
Nevertheless, Charlemagne did succeed in establishing a palace school here. Among the learned men brought to Aachen was the English scholarAlcuin from York in Northumbria. Through the school and Alcuin, classic learning was kept alive.
7. In part, the empire collapsed afterCharlemagne's death because it had become too large and unmanageable.
8. The death ofCharlemagne in 814 brought to power his weak son Louis the Pious (814-840) who could not control the Frankish aristocrats. Louis'sdeath in 840 resulted in his three sons fighting over their inheritances. Finally, they agreed to the Treaty of Verdun (843) that divided the Empire into
three parts: Charles the Bald (840-877) received the west Frankish lands (the core of modern France); Lothar (840-855) the "Middle Kingdoms"
extending from the North Sea to Italy; and Louis the German (840-876) the eastern lands (the core of modern Germany). Almost immediately, the"Middle Kingdom" broke up into petty principalities over which the other two kings fought.
Questions:
1. How was Charlemagne able to create and maintain such a vast empire?
2. Why were the successors unable to maintain the empire Charlemagne had established?
3. What is role of Charlemagne in the rebirth of intellectual activity?
4. What were the relationships and the consequences of Charlemagne's dealings with the Church?
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Monks and Their Mission
St. Benedict (c. 480-c. 543)
Benedictine rule
Monasticism
Women
Charlemagne and the Carolingians Charles the Great (768-814), Emperor, 800
Empire covered western and central Europe Missi dominici -- ensure the counts carrying the kings wishes
The World of Lords and Vassals
Invasions of the Ninth and Tenth Centuries Muslims and Magyars
Muslims attack southern coasts of Europe and raid into southernFrance
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Magyars from western Asia
Moved into eastern and central Europe
Magyars defeated at battle of Lechfeld, 955; converted toChristianity
The Vikings Scandinavia
Warriors, shipbuilders, and sailors
Danes occupied northeastern England by 878
Occupied part of France, Normandy Development of Fief-Holding
Breakdown of government
Vassalage
Contract between a lord and his subordinate (vassal)
Nobles took control of vast lands and gave grants to vassals whofought for their lord
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Grant of land came to be called a fief
The Practice of Fief-Holding
Subinfeudation
Vassals could have vassals, granting their own lands and
creating a lord-vassal relationship
Lord-vassal contract
Vassal owes the lord 40 days a year military service
Vassal had to go to the lords court to give advice
Vassal might sit in judgement of other vassals
Vassal responsible for financial aid
Lord obligated to protect his vassal
The lord had to maintain the vassal
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The Nobility of the Middle Ages
Held the political, economic, and social power
Were warriors
Social divisions based on wealth and landholdings
Aristocratic Women
Could legally hold property
Remained under the control of men
Managed the estate while husband off to war Castle
Oversaw the food supply
Eleanor of Aquitaine (c. 1122-1204)
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Spread of Christianity
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Evolution of the European Kingdoms
England in the High Middle
William of Normandy (1066-1087) Grants fiefs to Norman knights
Henry II (1154-1189), Plantagenet Expand the power of the royal courts
John (1199-1216) Magna Carta, 1215
Feudal liberties
Edward I (1272-1307)
English Parliament, 1295
Two knights from every county and two residents from eachtown meet with the Grand Council
House of Lords and House of Commons
Law made in consultation with representatives
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Growth of the French Kingdom Hugh Capet, 987
Lands around Paris
Many dukes more powerful that the Capetian kings
Philip II Augustus (1180-1223)
Philip IV the Fair (1285-1314)
Estates General, 1302
The Lands of the Holy Roman Empire Otto I (936-973)
New Roman Empire
Henry IV (1056-1106)
Frederick I (1152-1190)
Struggle with the church
Frederick II (1212-1250)
Struggle with the church
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World of the Slavs
World of the Slavs
1. The Slavic people were of Indo-European stock, probably originating in present-day southeastern Poland and the western Ukraine. They dividedinto three groups: Western, Southern, and Eastern Slavs. The Western Slavs pushed into Poland and Bohemia where their contact with theGermanic kingdom resulted in not only the extension of political authority over them by the German emperor but also conversion to western
Christianity.
2. The Southern Slavs came to occupy the Balkans where they eventually split between Roman Christianity (Croats) and eastern Christianity
(Serbs).
3. The Eastern Slavs occupied present-day Ukraine and European Russia. The invasion of the Swedish Vikings, called Varangians, resulted in theireventual domination over the Slavs as they became involved in the Slavic civil wars. The Varangian contact with the Byzantine Empire led to the
conversion of the region to eastern Christianity.
4. Kiev was the center of the union of east Slavic territories known as the principality ofKiev. Expansion ofKiev led to control over the easternSlavs and ultimately encompassed the lands between the Baltic and Black Seas and the Danube and Volga Rivers.
5. The Bulgars were originally and Asiatic people who conquered much of the Balkan peninsula. Eventually the larger native Southern Slavic
population absorbed them. By the ninth century they formed the largely Slavic Kingdom of Bulgaria.
Question:
1. What were the consequences of the Slavic expansion out of southeastern Poland and the western Ukraine?
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The Slavic People of Central and Eastern Europe Asian nomads
Western Slavs Polish and Bohemian kingdoms
Christian missionaries
Non-Slavic kingdom of Hungary
Southern Slavs
Eastern Slavs
Development of Russia Oleg (c. 873-913)
Kiev
Vladimir (c. 980-1015)
Kievan Rus state
Alexander Nevsky (c. 1220-1263)
Defeated an invading German army in 1242
Cooperated with the Mongols and rewarded with title of grandprince
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A Medieval Manor
A Medieval Manor
1. Agriculturists had long ago learned that if a field was repeatedly planted productivity would fall as nutrients were robbed from the soil. Thus, fields
were rotated throughout the planting seasons to give the soil a chance to recover. At any one time from a third to half of the fields lay fallow. Crops
such as wheat and rye would be grown in the autumn field and peas, beans, and barley in the spring field. What was planted varied from year toyear as crops were rotated.
2. The size of the manor varied. A large manor could cover several thousand acres while a small one would be slightly more than a hundred acres.
A small manor would have no more than a dozen households while a large one might have as many as fifty families. The people were congregatedinto a village consisting of several one-room dirt floor huts in which, perhaps, a family of five would dwell. Around these dwellings were spaces large
enough for vegetable gardens.
3. The lord'sdemesne that could consist of from a third to half of the arable land on the estate, was worked about three days of the week in returnfor lands to the peasant. The open fields were divided into strips of about an acre which were separated by narrow paths. The lack of fences
permitted domesticated animals to roam freely in the winter to forage for food.
4. The nearby forest was of economic importance. In addition to providing timber for building and fuel, bark could be used to make rope, the resin forlighting, and the ash and lime for fertilizers. Moreover, the forest environs contained nuts, berries, and wild game (though this was usually reserved
for the hunting of the lord). The pond and stream provided a source of water and food.
5. Peasants could be required to grind their grain in the lordsmill and cook in the lordsoven, both for a price.
6. Technological innovations such as the heavy plow, the shoulder collar for horses, metal horseshoes, and more efficient water and windmills
contributed to a significant increase in the food supply. Between 500 and 1300 the European population grew from 25 million to more than 70 million.
This was reversed in the fourteenth century when a colder and rainier climate caused harvests to shrink and prices to rise. Famine became a fact of
life, complicated by the Black Death between 1348 and 1354.
Questions:
1. In what respect was the manor a self-sustaining enterprise?
2. What was the relationship between the peasant on the manor and the lord?3. What new innovations contributed to the increase of production? How did they do this?
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World of the Peasants
Changes in agriculture
Increased land put under production Iron implements and plow
Use of horses
Windmills
Manorial system Serfs
Bound to the land, cannot leave without permission
Demesne
Daily life
Simple life Women bore children and worked the fields
Staple was bread
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The Revival of Trade
Italian states
Flanders
Fairs Money economy
Growth of cities Beginning in 10th century many new cities in northern Europe
Fortified strongholds by merchants for trade
Depend on the countryside
Develop own governments
Cities remained small, Europe remains rural
Daily Life in the Medieval City
Walled Most people were merchants
Dirty and smelly, relied on wells for water
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Industry in Medieval Cities Cloth, metalwork, shoes, and leather goods
Guilds
Apprenticeship
Christianity and Medieval Civilization
The Papal Monarchy Control over the Papal States
Increasingly became involved in political matters High officials came to hold their offices as fiefs from nobles
Reform of the Papacy Gregory VII (1073-1085) and reform
Henry IV of Germany (1056-1106)
The Church Supreme Innocent III (1198-1216)
Use of interdict
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New Religious Orders and New Spiritual Ideas
Cistercian order
Hildegard of Bingen (1098-1179) Francis of Assisi (1182-1226), Franciscans
Dominic de Guzmn (1170-1221), Dominicans
Holy Office, Inquisition
Find and try heretics
Torture after 1252
The Culture of the High Middle Ages
Rise of universities Irnerius (1088-1125), Bologna
University of Paris
Oxford
Liberal arts curriculum
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The Byzantine Empire in the Time of Justinian
The Byzantine Empire in the Time of Justinian
1. Ravenna was the capital of the western empire and from which the Ostrogothic king Theodoric (493-526) ruled as regent for the emperor inConstantinople.
2. The ease with which North Africa was gained in 533-34 led Emperor Justinian (527-565) to push on to Sicily and then into Italy where Naples,Rome, and Ravenna fell by 540. The campaigns continued another twelve years with the result that the Ostrogoths were driven north of the Alpsand southern Spain was conquered.
3. Pressure upon the Byzantine Empire came from the north and east. Around 560 the Avars, Bulgars (mounted Asiatic nomads), and the Slavs(Indo-Europeans) pressed into the Balkans. When the northern frontier crumbled, the Bulgars succeeded in seizing control of the lowerDanubevalley by 679. Meanwhile, in the East the Persians forced the collapse of the frontier in 602. This was followed in 626 by the alliance of the Avarsand the Persians to assault Constantinople . While the city was successful in resisting the onslaught, the attack so exhausted both sides that neitherwould be able to counter Muslim expansion later in the century.
Questions:
1. How successful was Justinian in trying to rebuild the Roman Empire?
2. What were the consequences of expansion for the Byzantine Empire?
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Development of Scholasticism
Thomas Aquinas (1225-1274), Summa Theologica
Vernacular literature
Romanesque Architecture
Romanesque churches
Basilica shape
Stone roofs requiring massive pillars and walls, little spacefor windows
Gothic Cathedral
Ribbed vaults and pointed arches replaced the barrel
vault Flying buttress
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The Early Crusades
The Early Crusades
1. In 1071 at Manzikert in Asia Minor a mercenary army of Seljuk Turks in the service of the Arabs defeated a Greek army. The Turks soonoccupied much of Asia Minor as well as Jerusalem. Fearful, Emperor Alexius I Comnenus (1081-1118) ofConstantinople issued a call for help toPope Urban II (1088-1099). In 1095 at the Council of Clermont, Urban challenged Christians to begin a holy war to recover the Holy Land. The initial
response was a ragtag rabble under the leadership of Peter the Hermit and Walter the Penniless. As it made its way to Constantinople, thePeasants' Crusade terrorized the people of the Balkans. Alexis wisely ushered the peasant crusaders on to Asia Minor where the Turks massacred
them.
2. Coming primarily from France and Germany, the armies of the FirstCrusade (1096-1099) converged on Constantinople with several thousandcavalry and perhaps 10,000 infantry. During three years of campaigning, Antioch fell in 1098 and after a five-week siege in 1099 so too didJerusalem. In both cases, the Muslim and Jewish inhabitants were massacred. The region as a whole was divided into the principality ofAntioch,the counties ofTripoli and Edessa, and the kingdom ofJerusalem. Antioch, Edessa, and Tripoli were all held as fiefs under the rule of thekingdom ofJerusalem.
3. With narrow strips of land and a small population, the Christian hold was precarious. It was only a matter of time until the Muslims attacked. When
they did, Edessa fell in 1144. Leading the reinforcements of the Second Crusade were King Louis VII of France and Emperor Conrad III ofGermany. It failed. In 1187 the sultan Saladin captured Jerusalem.
4. The Third Crusade brought together the three major monarchs of Europe: Richard I, the Lionhearted, of England, Philip II Augustus of France, andFrederick Barbarossa of Germany. Barbarossa took a land route in 1190 but drowned crossing a river in Asia Minor. His army disbanded before
reaching the Holy Land. Philip traveled by land in 1191 to Genoa and then by sea to Acre. He was joined shortly by Richard sailing from Normandy.Together the forces captured Acre but Philip and Richard quarreled and Philip returned to France, leaving his troops in the Holy Land. Althoughunable to recapture Jerusalem, Richard did confirm peace with Saladin in 1192 and safe conduct for Christians to Jerusalem.
5. In the Fourth Crusade, Venetians induced Crusaders to attack Christian Zara, a trading rival. Captured in 1202, the Crusaders turned toConstantinople that was sacked in 1203. A year later, the Latin Empire of Constantinople was created, lasting until 1261.
6. The Fifth Crusade fruitlessly attacked Acre and then turned its efforts on Egypt where Damietta was placed under siege in 1218. After its fall in
1219, Christians turned to the Nile Delta but were forced to flee when the Egyptians broke the dams in the canals. Damietta had to be surrenderedfor a safe retreat.
7. On the Sixth Crusade, Frederick II of Germany negotiated in 1229 an agreement with the sultan for the restoration of Christian Jerusalem,Bethlehem, Nazareth, and several towns in Palestine. In return, he promised not to aid Crusaders warring in Egypt. The fall ofAcre in 1291 endedthe Crusader states.
Question:
1. What were the objectives of the Crusades and why did they ultimately fail?
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The Expansion of Medieval Europe: The Crusades
The First Crusades
Pope Urban II, 1088-1099
Council of Clermont, 1095
Peasants Crusade
First Crusade, 1096-1099
Jerusalem, 1099
Crusader feudal states
Second Crusade, 1147-1149 Edessa recaptured by Muslims, 1144
Failure
Third Crusade, 1189-1192
Saladin captures Jerusalem in 1187
Frederick Barbarossa of Germany, Richard I the Lionhearted ofEngland, Philip II Augustus of France
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The Later Crusades
Fourth Crusade, 1204
Sack of Constantinople, 1204
Latin Empire of Constantinople
Byzantine army recaptures Constantinople in 1261
By end of the thirteenth century Christians lost Palestine
Acre falls, 1291
The Late Middle ages: A Time of Troubles in Europe
Change in weather patterns, 1315-1317
Famine, 1315-1317, 1330s, and 1340s
The Black Death
Bubonic plague
Mongol migrations
Yersinia Pestis
50-60 percent death rate
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Plague arrives in Europe October, 1347
European population decline 25 to 50 percent, 1447-1351; thus, 19to 38 million of 75 million
From 1347 to 1450, 60 to 75 percent of the population Reactions to the Plague
Flagellants
Anti-Semitism
Economic Dislocation and Social Upheaval
Noble landlords and peasants
Wages
English Peasants Revolt, 1381
Political Instability
The Hundred Years War, 1337-1453
English claims to France
Wool trade in Flanders
Dispute over the right of succession in France
Seizure of Gascony by the French, 1337
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Battle of Crcy, 1346
Charles V, 1364-1380
Battle of Agincourt, 1415
Joan of Arc, 1429-1431 Orlans
Political Disintegration
By 14th century the feudal order was breaking down
Professional soldiers
The Decline of the Church
Boniface VIII, 1294-1303
Popes supreme power over both church and state
King Philip IV of France, 1285-1314
French pope, Clement V, 1305-1314
The Papacy at Avignon (1305-1377)
Church administration improved
Use of excommunication
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The Great Schism and Cries for Reform
Papacy returned to Rome, 1378
Pope Urban VI, 1378-1389, Rome
Pope Clement VII, 1378-14, Avignon
France and its allies support Avignon and England andits allies support Rome
Council of Constance, 1417
New pope elected acceptable to all
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